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Baseball Jack Bauer Squared Sim Baseball

Games 161-162: The Regular Season Finishes

A quick reset before we try to alleviate the suspense. Despite losing five of six games, Jack Bauer Squared went into the final two games of the season tied for the division lead in the NL West. The 24×24 League is down to the wire, and even with a weak 77-83 record we were still playing for something and a playoff spot still very much in our grasp.

The four-game series at Olympic Stadium continued with our best starter, Mike Cuellar, taking the hill. $24 and Some Change got off to a good start in the top of the 1st inning with a two-run homer by Willie McGee. A homer by Dave Kingman in the 6th added another for the visitors.

Meanwhile aside from Bobby Bonilla’s second-inning double, JBS couldn’t get hits off Dave Righetti. Through 6 innings, that was all we’d produced. As I’ve noted, a sim doesn’t know the difference between Game 1 and Game 161, or the standings, or the desperation. So the game just unfolds with no special urgency in the air.

We got a rally started in the 7th inning, with back-to-back singles to start the inning followed by a couple outs. Then Rafael Ramirez singled to load the bases and bring up pinch hitter Bob Bailey with a chance to get us back into it. Bailey was not up to the task, however, striking out looking to end the threat.

$24 put it out of reach in the 9th when McGee hit his second homer of the game, and we went down meekly, 6-0. Predictably, our co-division leaders Steroids Make You Fast won their game to take a 1-game advantage into the season finale.

Game 161

That put our backs to the wall in a big way. We’d lost four in a row and six out of seven. It’s a depressing way to finish when you led by 3 games with eight left and suddenly to be down a game and the season finale looming. 

The only good scenario left would be for us to win and Steroids to lose in Game 162. Better take care of business, or it won’t matter what they do.

Burt Hooton got the start and immediately walked the leadoff batter and hit the next one. Up stepped catcher Ron Hassey, who drove in both runners with a double.

Believe it or not, Hooton wouldn’t allow another hit the rest of the game. He retired the next 20 in a row before yielding a walk in the 7th. The only question was whether we could get the runs to make the effort worth it.

In the bottom of the 1st we certainly looked like we could. Kal Daniels led off with a double off Dennis Martinez and scored on Bobby Murcer’s ground out. That made it 2-1.

In the 2nd inning, we got two runners on, but Ryne Sandberg flied out to end the threat. In the 3rd, we went down 1-2-3. 

In the 4th, we got a walk but nothing else. In the 5th, Kingman made an error, but we left the runner on 2nd.

In the 6th, we went down 1-2-3. In the 7th, Ramirez led off with a single, and we got a runner to second with one out. But Martinez struck out Daniels and Sandberg.

In the 8th, we went down 1-2-3. Our bullpen kept $24 to just the one hit with a perfect 8th and 9th, so it went to the bottom of the 9th stuck at the same 2-1 score from way back in the 1st inning.

$24 called on Tom Niedenfuer, a longtime Dodgers reliever perhaps best known for giving up two disastrous home runs to the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1985 League Championship Series. Dodgers fans certainly don’t remember his mostly effective run across his tenure with the team.

Sure, I digress, but the point is Niedenfuer was remarkably capable of blowing this game and giving us a chance to make the playoffs. He gave up a walkoff homer to light-hitting Ozzie Smith in Game 5 of that NLCS, after all.

So up stepped Garry Maddox to start us off, and he took strike three looking. Not helpful.

Bailey came in to hit for Gene Tenace, and he struck out on a bad pitch. Really not helpful.

Joel Youngblood came in to hit for Ramirez and try to keep hopes alive. He grounded to second. Final, 2-1.

Feeble finish to the game. Feeble finish to the season. 

Game 162

It was, of course, a one-run loss. We would wind up 17-27 in such games. Going .500 in them at 22-22 would have put us 4 games ahead in the division. Such is the difference bad luck can make.

Five straight losses, including the final four at home against a team with nothing to play for. Lost eight of the final 10. 

We finished 77-85 despite allowing only 3 more runs than we scored. With normal luck, we would have been 81-81, which would have been good enough.

And of course, predictably, Steroids Make You Fast lost its finale and won the division by a single game. Yup, get even one of these painful 1-run losses back and we’re tied. Win two of them, and we’re in the playoffs.

Instead, the season comes to a screeching halt. We choked away our lead and couldn’t manage even a single win when it counted. 

Here’s the (almost) final NL standings. There is still a tie for the wild card to be resolved before the playoffs can begin.

What felt like maybe a magical storyline instead turned into a humbling one. We played our way out of last place to sit with a solid lead only to fritter it away. It’s been an exciting season, if not a successful one ultimately. I’ll have a post mortem post to write on what went right and what went wrong.

Life, as with sim baseball, will go on. I’ve got 18 other teams going right now, and 11 of them are in first place. Three are deep into the seasons and doing very well. I could have made a better choice to build a running story around, but you can’t predict that. Hopefully it’s been worthwhile anyway.

I’m not done here even if the season is. Plenty more to say, and infinite space to say it in. See you in the next post …

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Baseball Jack Bauer Squared Sim Baseball

Games 148-150: Another Missed Opportunity

Stop me if you’ve heard this one. Jack Bauer Squared is playing one of the league’s worst teams and has a chance to do something helpful toward trying to get into the playoffs. And after going 4-2 against two division leaders, surely we could at least do the same against the league’s weakest teams.

Uh, no.

Things started out well enough. Burt Hooton carried a no-hitter and a 1-0 lead through 5 innings, but it all fell apart in the 6th. Todd Helton??? put up 4 runs and chased Hooton, and then they roughed up the bullpen to cruise to an 8-1 win.

Fortunately we stayed tied for the division lead with Steroids Make You Faster, but it was definitely a missed opportunity to move in front while they lost to the wild-card leader 24 Hours at Wrigley.

Game 148

JBS came out strong in the second game, racking up 3 in the 1st and 7 more in the 3rd to coast to a 13-5 victory. Steroids lost again, so we moved a game in front in the division race but still 3 games under .500.

The recently-maligned-in-this-space Ryne Sandberg drove in 3 runs, and Bobby Murcer’s 3 RBI pushed him to 102, the first to get to 100 on the team this season. The 102 puts him 25th in the league. We have two hitters leading the league in anything: Sandberg is tops in at-bats at 670 (also second in triples at 14), and Carlos Delgado leads in doubles at 46. Kal Daniels and Delgado are in the top six in on-base percentage.

One of my league mates corrected me on something I said about Sandberg in a previous post, too. Though I said he was putting up numbers that would be the worst in the sim history, the records I cited only applied to a particular group of leagues all played at the same salary cap. And because this league is a higher cap than that, it’s reasonable to expect better pitching and therefore lower performance.

Game 149

On to the rubber game of our series, and once again we led early. This time Teddy Higuera had a shutout going through 5 and we led 2-0. Again the 6th inning turned the tide, as Todd Helton??? smacked a pair of homers to take the lead and went on to win, 5-2.

Game 150

The two losses in the series were definitely a missed opportunity, as Steroids Make You Faster got swept. So we emerged a game ahead with 12 to go, but we could have opened up a little space that would have been nice.

And coming up next: four games head-to-head with Steroids at Dodger Stadium as we begin the final three series of the year, all in the division. With teams only 3 and 5 games out behind us, it’s still possible for any of these four teams to win it. It’s also quite likely someone will win with a sub-.500 record too, since we’d have to go 8-4 just to get to 81-81.

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Baseball Jack Bauer Squared Sim Baseball

Games 145-147: A Missed Opportunity

Let’s reset the scenario here for Jack Bauer Squared entering the season’s final 18 games. We came into our third straight road series at 71-73 and tied for first place in the National League West. Coming off series with the two division leaders where we went a combined 4-2, we headed to play the league’s two worst teams next before finishing with 12 division games.

If ever there were an opportunity to take advantage of, the series at Tigers of the Ontario Peninsula qualified. Every win feels precious right now, and you have to beat the teams below you. If only I could have explained that better to my code bits.

So we opened the series in Tiger Stadium by squandering run-scoring opportunities early. We left seven runners on in the first 4 innings and led just 1-0 despite outhitting the Tigers 5-0. The Tigers put up two runs in the 4th and another in the 5th off Teddy Higuera and then it stayed 3-1 until Bobby Murcer led off the 8th inning with his team-high 25th home run.

We put runners on the corners after that but couldn’t get the tying run home. We ended up with a 3-2 loss, dropping to 16-22 in one-run games. Meanwhile Steroids Make You Fast moved a game ahead of us by winning their game.

Game 145

No time to mess around now against a team we needed to beat, and we came out stronger in the second game. Ryne Sandberg hit his 10th homer and Garry Maddox doubled in two in the 1st inning to give Mike Cuellar an early lead. 

We got another start from good Cuellar, fortunately. He gave up only 1 run and 2 hits in 8 innings, and Bob Woodward nailed down the final out for his 34th save of a 5-2 win.

Game 146

Steroids lost their game to push us back into a tie, both of us now two games under .500 again. You start to get the feeling there won’t be much separating us at the end of this season.

A bit of a brief sidebar here feels needed to discuss Sandberg’s performance for me. The 1984 Ryno was an MVP for the Cubs, hitting .314 with 200 hits, slugging over .500, stealing 32 bases, and a Gold Glove fielder. 

He was my 3rd-round pick in this draft, where great hitting second basemen weren’t that easy to come by. I’ve had him batting 2nd all season, where I still believe he belongs. It’s just … he’s been really disappointing. He’s played fine defense at least, with only 7 errors, but I needed quite a bit more offense than that out of him and there’s just no sign he’s going to provide it. 

He’s played all 147 games and has put up a meager .245/.278/.370 slash line (compared with .314/.367/.520 in real life). For what it’s worth, in 53 seasons for other owners in his performance history, Sandberg’s worst season was .255/.293/.417. So he might be on his way to surpassing that for me. Gee thanks, random luck.

Now back to the action … We again got going early in the series’ final game, with Murcer’s 26th homer capping a 2-run 1st, but the Tigers quickly pounced on Bert Blyleven and opened a 5-2 lead in the 3rd. And then crickets until the 8th inning.

We rallied nicely in the 8th, loading the bases with no outs and Maddox clearing them with a double to tie the game. We couldn’t get Maddox home from 3rd with one out, alas. Then Gorman Thomas led off the bottom of the 8th with a homer off Joe Sambito, and we went meekly in the 9th to lose 6-5, another missed opportunity.

Game 147

That made us 16-23 in one-run games and 72-75 overall. Fortunately Steroids also lost their rubber game and remained tied with us. The rest of the division, as noted previously, isn’t exactly far behind either: 3 and 5 games back. With all division teams playing each other over the final three series (each four games), anyone really could wind up winning this.

Next up we come home to Olympic Stadium to face Todd Helton???, who at 60-87 brings up the rear in the NL but yet has won 8 of its past 10. Since we just learned that beating teams below us isn’t easy at all, there’s no chance of overconfidence going into this one either. But you know it would be a darn good time for a sweep, I’m just sayin’.

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Baseball MLB Sim Baseball

One Game Short

Despite winning our final 7 games of the season, my 1997 New York Mets fell one game short of the playoffs in the Cooperstown Historical Replay season. The Marlins held us off 92-70 to 91-71 to wrap up the wild card, and now they’ll try to duplicate the magic that led to a World Series win that year.

It was a good run and I don’t feel like I could have gotten much more out of this team. I drafted 9th last season, and 7 of the 8 playoff teams were ones drafted ahead of me. The only one that wasn’t: the Marlins, of course, who went one pick after mine. 

We are waiting now for the lottery to determine our draft order for picking 1998 teams. By finishing 3 games above the Mets’ real-life win total, I’ll probably be somewhere around the 9th-10th pick again unless I’m fortunate enough to jump into the top 3. 

The 1998 season has a lot of great storyline options and teams that would be fun to manage. Start with the Cardinals and Cubs for the Mark McGwireSammy Sosa record home run race and the 114-win Yankees, but there are certainly a few more that would be worthy to take. I have no idea who I’d take if I got a top-three pick, but I hope to have that problem.

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Baseball MLB Sim Baseball

Another Exciting Finish

I have other Sim League Baseball teams going, of course. Thirteen active seasons going right now, in fact.

One of them is my favorite ongoing league, Cooperstown Historical Replay. This league had a couple seasons going before I joined, but it works very simply and appeals to my old board-game mentality immensely. 

The league replays major-league seasons one after another, with each owner drafting a real team and using only the players from that team. It’s as pure a replay as you can get in this sim, but it also somewhat exposes where it can be a little flawed. The hitters tend to feast on the weaker pitching, and the bad teams tend to do really poorly.

But to keep owners motivated even when stuck with a lousy real team, we have a lottery where your chances are based on how close you came to managing your team to a record as good as real life. If you outshine the team’s actual performance, you’re likely to draft in the top few teams for the following season, regardless of how good or bad you were.

We are in 1997 right now, and for the second straight season I’m managing the New York Mets. Just the way it worked out. We are one game from the end of the season, and I’ve managed the Mets to a 90-71 mark and just one game behind the wild card-leading Florida Marlins.

The actual 1997 Mets went 88-74, so I’m on the good side of the ledger. That should get me a top-10 pick for 1998, but right now I’m fighting for that final playoff spot. We’ve won 6 straight to get a chance at forcing a tiebreaker game 163. We’ll have to beat Houston while the Marlins lose to Pittsburgh in the finale for that to happen, but it’s fun to have a chance.

My history in this league is decent enough. I had a great run in somehow managing the Pirates to a World Series title in 1987 and then taking the 1988 Dodgers to the World Series the following season but losing in seven games. As a Dodgers fan, it was special to try to get that team the trophy, since it remains the last time the team won. 

I’ve gotten one team to a World Series since, but these Mets aren’t really a championship contender. We’d still have to win a one-game tiebreaker just to get to the division series, and the team is already pretty fatigued trying to get there at all. Had to go for it, though. We’ll soon find out if our season continues for one more game.

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Baseball Jack Bauer Squared Sim Baseball

Games 142-144: Every Game Counts

Fresh off that surprising sweep of Hitmen 24×24, the Jack Bauer Squared squad headed to Atlanta Fulton County Stadium for another huge series against Piazza Blues. When you’re tied for the division with 21 games to go, every loss starts to sting. Not to mention those 21 one-run losses we’ve racked up through the season.

Piazza Blues jumped out to a 5-1 lead in the 5th inning of the series opener, and we never really had a decent look at the game. The 7-2 loss put us a game behind in the division race and kept us from hitting .500 on the season. 

Game 142

We came out in the second game with a run in each of the first three innings, and Mike Cuellar put up another strong start. Cuellar allowed 2 runs and 3 hits across 7 innings, which normally would be good enough to win.

Alas, the home squad tied it in the bottom of the 8th, and we went to extra innings. We broke it open in the 11th with a four-run inning, keyed by Bob Bailey’s two-run single, and went on to win 7-3. 

Game 143

Coupled with a loss by Steroids Make You Fast, we moved back into a first-place tie and again just one game below .500. The rubber game of the series would be yet another shot at reaching the even mark.

Things started off exceedingly well. Joel Youngblood homered to lead off the game, and Carlos Delgado hit a solo shot two batters later for a 2-0 lead. We added 3 more in the 3rd inning, keyed by Bobby Murcer’s two-run homer. (Fun fact: Delgado and Murcer both with exactly 24 HR and 97 RBI.)

Two can play at that game, unfortunately. Piazza Blues kept going deep, and going deep, and going deep … to the tune of six homers in all. We wound up losing 9-6 to slip yet again to two games under .500 but remained in a first-place tie. 

Game 144

JBS and Steroids are tied at 71-73, with our division opponents only 4 and 6 games back and still with a chance to get in there, too. The wild-card leader is at 75-69, which means there’s even some chance still of making the playoffs that way. 

With 18 games to go, we get a bit of a schedule advantage with back-to-back three-game series against the NL’s two worst teams. After that it’s four games each against our three division opponents, and that’s all that’s left. The playoffs are in sight, and you never know what can happen if you make it.

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Baseball Jack Bauer Squared Sim Baseball

Games 136-138: Fighting for First

Dear Reader, I failed you in maintaining a real-time running story of this sim season and fell a bit behind. The present drama, however, argues for catching up when I can and keeping you informed to what is unfolding down the stretch. So the posts might not fit chronologically, but I’ll get it all here eventually.

So, with the miracle of getting into a first-place tie duly noted, we have to be realistic about where this Jack Bauer Squared team stands now. We have a 9-game road trip that includes the league’s two best teams coming up, and a slip back is certainly to be expected soon. 

That puts a premium on winning against anyone else as the season starts to run out of games. This home series against Royal Gamers definitely fit into that category. 

Teddy Higuera was up to the task in the opener, extending a run of strong starts with 1 run allowed in 7 innings. Higuera improved to 4-2 with a 2.92 ERA across his past 10 starts.

Bobby Murcer tied the game in the 2nd inning with his 21st homer, and then he drove in the go-ahead run on a 6th-inning single. That proved enough for a 2-1 victory and keeping pace atop the division. That made us 15-21 in 1-run games now, which still isn’t good but it’s closer to even anyway.

Game 136

The second game was the opposite of the opener, a true slugfest. The Mr. Hyde version of Mike Cuellar showed up for this one, as he allowed 8 runs in 5.1 innings. 

There is just no pattern to Cuellar’s runs totals recently. Working backwards, here are the runs he’s allowed: 8, 1, 5, 0, 7, 5, 0, 0, 3, 7, 2, 6. Sometimes he’s really good, sometimes really bad, and rarely in the middle.

Nonetheless, JBS rallied from a 9-4 deficit to tie it in the 7th, keyed by a 3-run double from Garry Maddox. Royal Gamers jumped ahead in the top of the 10th with 3 runs, and we threatened in the bottom of the inning before stranding two runners and losing, 12-10.

Game 137

That dropped us a game behind Steroids Make You Fast heading into the series finale. The Gamers jumped out to a 6-2 early lead, however, and we couldn’t put a good rally together until the 9th. 

Down 3, we loaded the bases with one out. But we failed to score and dropped the finale 7-4 and remained one game back in the division and just one game ahead of third place. We may be only 67-71, but if you get into the playoffs anything can happen.

Game 138

The toughest remaining piece of schedule looms now, a series at Hitmen 24×24 (85-53) followed by one at Piazza Blues (84-54), the two other division leaders in the NL. We have gone 4-5 against Hitmen thus far, and we need to get a win or two to keep from slipping.

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Baseball Jack Bauer Squared Sim Baseball

Games 67-69: Fighting to Compete

Our series opener with Block Chain started out well, with a leadoff homer by Kal Daniels to open the game. It was Daniels’ 10th of the season, and he’s slashing a very fine .298/.410/.535 leading off against right starters. No complaints there.

We still led 2-1 into the 7th, but the ever-maligned Mike Cuellar gave up a three-run double to flip the script. In 1969, Cuellar went 23-11 with a 2.02 ERA for the Orioles. Even normalized because of pitching’s edge in that time, his ERA is still 2.08. He really should be much better than 5-7 with a 5.01 ERA.

We got within a run in the 9th and had the tying run on 2nd with no outs, but we couldn’t budge him and fell 4-3. That makes us 7-13 in one-run games now.

Game 67

The offense rebounded in the second game of the series, fortunately. Bobby Murcer hit a three-run homer, his 8th, as we opened up an 8-1 lead and cruised to a 9-4 win. 

Bert Blyleven notched his 10th win to lead the team. He’s 18th in the league in ERA, too, and again he was drafted as the 4th starter!

Game 68

That brought us to the rubber game, and it would certainly have been nice to come out of this series a step closer to .500. Alas, Block Chain broke a 1-1 tie in the 6th inning with a pair of solo homers off Teddy Higuera, then tacked on three more runs off Rod Beck in the 8th to pull away for a 6-1 win.

Game 69

At 32-37, Jack Bauer Squared remains 5 games out of first place and 3 behind the wild card leaders. To reach my goal of .500 at the 81-game mark, we’re going to need a really nice run now.

Next up: our first series with Tulo? More Like Too High since the season’s first three games. Always tough going against my friend NebHusker, whose team is also fighting to compete at 34-35. This is one of the teams I need to pass in the wild card chase, plus there is potential for trash talk if we can put up a good showing.

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Baseball Jack Bauer Squared Sim Baseball

Games 65-66: Joining the Wild Card Race

The first game of the series with Throw the Spitball, Gaylord had a few highlights … for them. For Jack Bauer Squared, it was a forgettable 9-1 loss featuring poor starting pitching, relief pitching and hitting. 

Game 65

We fell behind 5-1 early in the second game back in Olympic Stadium, but we chipped away with two in the 6th and then exploded for six runs in the 7th. Six consecutive hits produced the rally, and it left enough cushion for some shaky relief so we emerged with a 9-7 win and a split.

Game 66

That was enough to make a small move in the division race, though, as the teams above and behind us got swept. So after 66 games, we sit 31-35, 5 games out of first place and 2 ahead of third place.

There are four teams ahead of us in the wild card race, all bunched at 32-34 or 33-33. We are definitely in the race now though, as we head to Shea Stadium for a three-game series against Block Chain.